Aaron Hernandez was arrested and charged with first-degree murder and five other gun-related charges for the shooting death of 27-year-old Odin Lloyd last month. As soon as Hernandez was implicated in the murder, the New England Patriots began distancing themselves from the tight end. They cut him the morning he was arrested.

Though the team and owner Robert Kraft have commented on Hernandez, very little has been heard from the team’s current players. LBS spoke with Pats running back Shane Vereen on Monday about the team’s reaction to the situation.

“I haven’t really talked to many guys,” Vereen told Larry Brown Sports, “but the guys I have talked to, we’re still united, we’re still a team. It’s something we have to move on from and focus on the season.”

Vereen, who is entering his third season in the league, spoke to LBS at the Bear Trap Entertainment All-Star Celebrity Kickoff Party at the Playboy Mansion on Monday night, and said he was surprised by Hernandez’s arrest.

“Definitely,” Vereen answered when asked if the arrest surprised him. “But at the same time, we don’t really know much about it. At the same time all we can really do is go out and play football and do what we can do.”

There were reports that Vereen lined up as a receiver at times during the spring and that he could do that some more during the season as a way of filling Hernandez’s role in the offense. Vereen was vague about those plans when asked.

“We do a lot of things with our offense. A lot of people with a lot of different positions. I’ve lined up at receiver before, we might do it again this year. You never know. Depends on what the coaches feel like.”

Vereen is hoping the team and offense can repeat their past success in the upcoming season.

“Hopefully some wins,” Vereen said when asked about expectations for the season. “It’s all about the team, it’s all about the offense as a unit. Hopefully we can be as successful as we’ve been in past seasons.”

Vereen is the latest in a strong line of running backs to come from Cal. From J.J. Arrington to Marshawn Lynch to Justin Forsett, Jahvid Best, and now Vereen, Cal has put a number of running backs in the NFL in the past decade. Vereen told LBS that is a source of pride for them.

“Yeah, we take big pride in that. A lot of is credit to our former running back coach Ron Gould, who’s now the head coach at UC Davis. We work hard at that and take pride in it.”

Vereen saw an increased workload last season and more action in the playoffs. With Danny Woodhead gone, he should see even more work this season.